Step 1: Prepare the bottle

Get your Lipton Tea bottle and clean it out (don't use soap) Fill the bottle with water from your sink or hose or whatever. Now empty it out. Dry only the outside of the bottle. You only have little droplets in the bottle now, right? Good.

Step 2: Test your bottle

OK, we're getting to the good part. Close the bottle with the cap and squeeze really hard.

-When you squeeze, the air pressure inside the bottle goes up, and so does the temperature.
-When you release, the air pressure inside the bottle goes back down and so does the temperature.

Squeezing the bottle was to give you a science lesson and to check for leaks. If there are no leaks, good, if there are, get a new bottle and repeat steps 1 and 2.

I made mine 200 billion years ago and used it to discover the black hole bomb, which collappsed that universe, created a singularity, which resulted in the Big Bang, that led to life, dark matter, dark flow, dark energy, gravity, nuclear fusion, negative energy, and THE INTERNET-therefore, Instructables itself!!!!! BEAT THAT!

you stated the following: -step 4Conclusion -Clouds are made from water droplets, decreased air -pressure, and smoke. only partially true - clouds are made from water vapour, low air pressure, and micrscopic particles At low pressure, the vapour clings to the particles to form visible clouds - when too much clings, the result is rain... there is always a small particle of dust in a rain droplet or a snowflake or any other type of precipitation. Smoke (carbon particles, unburnt match particles)CAN be a form of the particles, but so can other things, like dust, pollen(?), and so on.

Interesting, but I didn't want to download 30Mb. Could you add a shorter clip (for the benefit of people with slower connections than mine)? This really needs the video to be appreciated, and at that size a lot of people aren't going to see and understand this. L